Packer Collegiate Institute v. University of New York

273 A.D. 203, 76 N.Y.S.2d 499
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 7, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 273 A.D. 203 (Packer Collegiate Institute v. University of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Packer Collegiate Institute v. University of New York, 273 A.D. 203, 76 N.Y.S.2d 499 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Foster, J.

This controversy is submitted upon an agreed statement of facts. Plaintiff challenges on constitutional grounds the validity of the following paragraph (subd. 2, par. e) of section 3210 -of the Education Law (former § 625, subd. B, par. 5). stRegistration of certain private schools. No person or persons, firm or corporation, other than the public school authorities or an established religious group, shall establish or maintain a nursery school and/or kindergarten and/or elementary school giving instruction in the [subjects included in section six hundred and twenty, subdivision c, paragraph one-a, of this article] ten common school branches of arithmetic, reading, spelling, writing, the English language, geography, United States history, civics, hygiene and physical training, unless the school is registered under regulations of the commissioner [prescribed by the Board of Regents], Upon complying with the said regulations and after payment of a fee of twenty-five dollars a certificate of registration shall be issued by the department which shall be valid for a period of two years from the date of issuance unless suspended or revoked within said period pursuant to said regulations. Such registration may be renewed biennially thereafter upon the payment of a renewal registration fee of twenty-five dollars.”

Pursuant to the authority thus vested in him the Commissioner of Education has adopted certain regulations, approved by the Board of Regents, under which private schools covered by the statute may be registered. Briefly paraphrased they are:

1. To obtain registration a school must apply upon forms prescribed by the commissioner, who shall determine the-eligibility of the school on the facts presented.

[206]*2062. Registration is given to a school for a specific number of children, and at a specific location which may not be changed without the approval of the commissioner.

3. Registration shall be for two years; and for renewals schools shall be required to conform to any changes in regulations.

4. No school shall be registered if it puts out misleading advertising.

5. (a) Elementary schools, nursery schools and kindergartens shall have at least six pupils enrolled; (b) the program and curriculum shall meet standards established by the commissioner; (c) the financial resources of the school must be adequate to maintain an approved educational program; (d) the qualifications of the teaching staff must be substantially equivalent to public school standing; (e) the number of children per teacher shall be such as to insure proper education for children of different age levels; (f) adequate equipment and space shall be provided for both indoor and outdoor education; (g) adequate provisions shall be made for health, safety and sanitation with certain specific requirements and restrictions as to buildings, floors used, fire escapes, toilets, etc.; (h) opportunities for parent education as may be necessary to make the program effective for children shall be provided; (i) schools shall be in session approximately the same number of days as public schools; (j) adequate records shall be kept.

6. Only registered schools may use the word “school” or “kindergarten” in advertising.

7. Schools established prior to 1939 which do not meet all such standards may nevertheless be registered if they can offer equivalent standards acceptable to the Commissioner of Education, except that no school shall be registered which does not have local fire and health approval.

The regulations thus paraphrased are those approved by the Board of Regents on February 28, 1947, and submitted on the argument of the case. They are not quite identical with those set forth in the exhibit annexed to the agreed statement of facts, which were adopted in 1939 and amended in 1943. We assume of course that the later regulations are those to" be examined in our consideration of the case.

Plaintiff is a private educational institution for girls, incorporated by a special act of the Legislature on March 19, 1853. Am ring other things it maintains a nursery school, a kindergarten and an elementary school. None of these are supported by the public school authorities or by any established religious group. In the operation of these schools plaintiff comes within the statute quoted and the regulations enacted thereunder. It refuses however to apply for registration and asserts that both [207]*207the statute and the regulations are unconstitutional on the following grounds.

First, that they are not a proper and legitimate exercise of the police power of the State, and contravene the Fourteenth Amendment, section 1, of the Constitution of the United States, and article I, section 11, of the New York State Constitution. Second, that they are in violation of the same Federal and State constitutional provisions in that they discriminate against nonsectarian private schools in favor of sectarian schools, and deprive the former of their property without due process of law. Third, that the statute complained of constitutes an unlawful delegation of legislative power, and the regulations an exercise of power improperly delegated, in violation of article III, section 1, of the New York State Constitution.

It may be observed that the only direction to the Legislature in the State Constitution concerning education, aside from the continuance of a State university and regents, is to maintain a system of free common schools (article XI, § 1). Nothing is said about the regulation of private schools, and if such regulation is to be assumed it can only be justified as an exercise of police power. That any business or occupation affected with a public interest may be regulated by the Legislature under its police power is a general principle too well settled to require the citation of any authorities. It is, we think, an indisputable fact also that all schools, public or private, are affected with a public interest, and hence subject to reasonable regulation under the police power of the State. The fact that prior to 1939 the State had never entered the field of regulating private nursery schools and kindergartens is not a sound reason for denying its power to do so now. The existence of such power is assumed even in those cases, cited hereafter, where specific compulsory laws or prohibitions have been held invalid.

Regulation however is one thing, and compulsion or prohibition which offends against a fundamental freedom of choice is quite another matter. Thus, the State cannot compel children to attend free public schools when their parents desire to send them to parochial schools (Judd v. Board of Education, 278 N. Y. 200; Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U. S. 510). By the same token the State may not compel children to attend public schools when their parents desire to send them to nonsectarian private schools. Nor may the State prevent a private school from teaching a useful and harmless subject, such as a foreign language (Meyer v. State of Nebraska, 262 U. S. 390), or adopt a regulation that no foreign language school may be conducted without a license (Farrington v, Tokushige, 273 U. S. 284). [208]

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Bluebook (online)
273 A.D. 203, 76 N.Y.S.2d 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/packer-collegiate-institute-v-university-of-new-york-nyappdiv-1948.